Double Dates

Family Tree Maker can display double dates to account
for the crossover between the Julian and Gregorian calendars. If you enter a date that
falls between January 1 and March 25 for any year before 1753, a double date will appear.

Double dates work as follows: you can type either Jan 1, 1493/4 or Jan 1, 1493/1494;
both display as January 1, 1493/94. If you don't type in both of the years, Family Tree
Maker interprets the year you typed as the second year. For example, if you type January
1, 1494, it's displayed as January 1, 1493/94.

To disable double dates, from the Prefs menu, select Dates
& Measures. (If you're using version 4.4 or later, from the File
menu, select Preferences, then Dates & Measures).
Set the cutoff date for Double Dates to 100 and click OK.

What are double dates?

Beginning in 45 B.C., many parts of the world used the Julian calendar to mark the passage
of time. According to the Julian calendar, March 25 was the first day of the year and each
year was 365 days and 6 hours long. In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII determined that the Julian
calendar was incorrect: each day was just a little bit too long. This meant that the human
calendar wasn't keeping up with nature's calendar, and the seasons kept arriving slightly
earlier in the year. To solve the problem, Pope Gregory XIII created the Gregorian
calendar. This is the calendar that we use officially in the United States. As you know,
this new calendar changed the first day of the year from March 25 to January 1. Pope
Gregory also had everyone jump ahead by 10 days to make up for the days that were lost
when the world was using the old Julian calendar.

The practice of writing double dates resulted from this switch from the Julian to the
Gregorian calendar, and also from the fact that not all countries and people accepted the
new calendar at the same time. For example, England and the American colonies didn't
officially accept the new calendar until 1752. Before 1752, the English government still
observed March 25 as the first of the year, but most of the population observed January 1
as the first of the year. For this reason, many people wrote dates falling between January
1 and March 25 with both years, as in the following examples.

Julian or Old Style

Gregorian or New Style

Double Date

December 25, 1718

December 25, 1718

December 25, 1718

January 1, 1718

January 1, 1719

January 1, 1718/19

February 2, 1718

February 2, 1719

February 2, 1718/19

March 25, 1719

March 25, 1719

March 25, 1719

By the time England and the colonies adopted the new Gregorian calendar, the
discrepancy between the two calendars was eleven days, instead of ten. To resolve the
discrepancy, the government ordered that September 2, 1752 be followed by September 14,
1752. Some people also added 11 days to their birth dates (a fact which is not noted on
their birth certificates).